Home › Forums › General Trade Forum › Fixing somebody else’s mess
- This topic has 17 replies, 12 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 5 months ago by
Troffy.
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November 6, 2009 at 3:50 pm #49932
Troffy
Participanti recently went to a job on a Dishwasher that was leaking, when i got there the customer explained that another Engineer had come out to do a job on the machine and ever since it had been leaking, after numerous phonecalls to the engineer they gave up and rang me to have a look, it was a simple fix, a hose had been left off but i got the feeling they were placing some of the blame on me, what policy do you guys adopt in situations like that ?
November 6, 2009 at 4:04 pm #302779Martin
ParticipantRe: Fixing somebody else’s mess
Troffy wrote:a hose had been left off but i got the feeling they were placing some of the blame on me,
Who was blaming you and why? You went out and fixed the problem and fitted the hose back on that someone left off so how can anyone turn it round to say you were the guilty party? 😕
November 6, 2009 at 4:59 pm #302780spimps
ParticipantRe: Fixing somebody else’s mess
They somewhat lump us all together,followed one who had alledgedly fitted a wash pump for £100 ish on a indesit/hotpoint she didn’t say until I got there.
Tipped it over and she said he only took the side off,fitted wash pump from the side 😯 don’t think so.Not only that the leads were off the drain pump.Ex manufacture’s engineer too .
She gave up trying to get him back and was moaning and going on about poor service and calls me to pick up the bits so to speak.
If they tell me over the phone that I’m following someone I always say no thanks.November 6, 2009 at 9:07 pm #302781lee8
ParticipantRe: Fixing somebody else’s mess
Just explain as best you can what you did, if you`ve done nothing wrong and they are being stroppy, walk away.
November 9, 2009 at 10:14 pm #302782roly16
ParticipantRe: Fixing somebody else’s mess
lee8 wrote:Just explain as best you can what you did, if you`ve done nothing wrong and they are being stroppy, walk away.
Before or after you’ve got your money?
November 13, 2009 at 5:52 pm #302783Hammertime
ParticipantRe: Fixing somebody else’s mess
Tipped it over and she said he only took the side off,fitted wash pump from the side 😯 don’t think so.
If it was a B/S/h dishwasher then you can easily change the wash pump from the side.
H
November 13, 2009 at 6:04 pm #302784Martin
ParticipantRe: Fixing somebody else’s mess
Hammertime wrote:Tipped it over and she said he only took the side off,fitted wash pump from the side 😯 don’t think so.
If it was a B/S/h dishwasher then you can easily change the wash pump from the side.
H
Run that by us again will you please?:D
“Fitted wash pump from the side” then you admitted you can easily change a BSH pump from the side so what is the point are you trying to make here? 😕
November 13, 2009 at 6:24 pm #302785roly16
ParticipantRe: Fixing somebody else’s mess
Hammertime got the quotation marks wrong but his point was correct. He was quoting spimps from further back in his first sentence (that ‘you can’t change a wash pump from the side’) and was then making the point that you can if it’s a BSH dishwasher.
Hope that clears up the confusion Martin. 😯
If anyone else has any confusion they’d like clarifying please le me know.
November 14, 2009 at 10:33 am #302786Gazman1000
ParticipantRe: Fixing somebody else’s mess
If a customer tell me someone has been there before me, I refuse the call, chances are they have paid someone else to look at it and I find them less likely to want to spend more money putting it right.
The other calls I always turn away are the ones that say, we have the part but my husband doesn’t have the time to fit it. :rolls: Or we have the part we looked it up the fault on the internet and got it from eBay.
November 14, 2009 at 10:37 am #302787cornwell40
ParticipantRe: Fixing somebody else’s mess
Eyyup Gary :waving:
TC
November 14, 2009 at 10:43 am #302788Gazman1000
ParticipantRe: Fixing somebody else’s mess
cornwell40 wrote:Eyyup Gary :waving:
TC
Hi, feeling better?November 14, 2009 at 11:22 pm #302789rolf
ParticipantRe: Fixing somebody else’s mess
Gazz man wrote .If a customer tell me someone has been there before me, I refuse the call, chances are they have paid someone else to look at it and I find them less likely to want to spend more money putting it right
To be honest I get a kick out of jobs like this.Maybe im a bit twisted but I love the challenge of sucess where someone else has failed.
You do have to make sure that they are prepared to pay you for being a super hero though.November 15, 2009 at 12:21 am #302790Penguin45
ParticipantRe: Fixing somebody else’s mess
Never had a problem with it – it’s all work and the customer is going to pay as far as I’m concerned.
Chris.
November 24, 2009 at 2:12 am #302791gandh1
ParticipantRe: Fixing somebody else’s mess
Penguin45 wrote: and the customer is going to pay Chris.
emphasis on the IS then… 😉
November 24, 2009 at 11:44 pm #302792leavemetogetonwithit
ParticipantRe: Fixing somebody else’s mess
gandh1 wrote:
Penguin45 wrote:
and the customer is going to pay Chris.emphasis on the IS then… 😉
Or on the PAY
Mike. -
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